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Top WWE Superstars & Jobbers: 2017 Week 47

The aftermath of a week in Houston

Each week, we look through the win-loss records of the WWE Superstars during the year to see who really are the best and worst, if wins and losses actually mattered. You can view more over in our Statistics section. You can also help support us by subscribing to our Patreon.

WWE and NXT had a big week in Houston, doing four straight nights of shows with TakeOver: War Games, Survivor Series, Raw, and SmackDown. The weird thing is that Survivor Series was all brand vs. brand, so the swings for wins and losses effected a lot of the brand in the same way. Oddly enough, it didn't change much for the women who are all combined into one list.

Raw had a big night at Survivor Series, picking up the big win thanks to Triple H. Jason Jordan was not on the card, which cost him three spots and Matt Hardy lost on the Kickoff to risk falling off in the tenth position.

Every single position shifted this week with no one falling off. But one thing is for certain: SmackDown is the Uso Penitentiary. Jimmy Uso takes the top spot, with his brother moving up a spot as well. You can blame this on Triple H burying everyone on Sunday.

Kalisto once again failed to capture the Cruiserweight Championship so that experiment is pretty much done for now, especially with Hideo Itami on his way. Meanwhile Enzo Amore is slowly climbing as he goes up a spot, even though he still has a losing record.

As I mentioned at the top, not a whole lot changed with the women's rankings despite all of them being in action this week. Nia Jax is the only one who benefited, even though she was eliminated in the Survivor Series match.

Ariya Daivari and Tony Nese traded spots again, and The Miz moved up one more spot on the list before he is deactivated to go shoot the next Marine movie. It's a shame it looks like he'll end the year so low after being a huge part of both brands for most of it.

About Owen Douglass

Owen Douglass is a co-founder of ProWrestling.Cool and one of the hosts of the Heel Turn podcast. With over 20 years of wrestling experience, there isn't much that shocks him these days.